userchanged1
Member
- Aug 11, 2011
- 89
- 0
- 6
I'm not into AE for profession or even aspire to be an amateur. I'm just a guy with too many guitars and a wish to record songs in better quality than I did back in the day when I did it with cassettetapes.
I do get some of the frustration, but this evolution is here to stay guys. Its not only in AE. Same thing happens in video editing, graphic design, etc. And those guys whine about it just as much. Only one thing to do about it, and that's accept it.
Shit used to be an art, now not so much anymore. As I said, I get the grievances. Hell I work at the movie theatre, job was way cooler back when i had to handle actual film, now its all digital and sucky programming on a pc.
But it is what it is and we all need to get over it. This 'things used to be better in the old days' is really something that literally has been around for centuries and probably in 20 years we will all say that back in 2014 things were way better.
I remember watching the 'Apocalypse Now' documentary; Heart Of Darkness if I remember correctly. In which Coppola prophecized at one point he hoped to see the day that any random guy could afford a videocamera. Because he imagined that this could bring so much new creativity into the industry that otherwise would remain untapped potential.
Now a few decades later we all have a HD camera in our pocket and yeah, you can look at the crap on youtube and whine about how fucking wrong he was. But I say go onto Vimeo and watch some staff picks. What is happening there is exactly what the guy predicted. And I guess even though in absolute numbers the crap outweighs the good a 1000 to 1, in my opinion it is worth it for the people that are willing to dig a bit deeper to find a gem.
Because even though you Audio engineers apparently increasingly deal with crappy bands/attitudes, there are those occasional great records that still are being made today that would never have left the bedroom if it wasn't for this evolution. Like everything in life, it works both ways i guess.
I do get some of the frustration, but this evolution is here to stay guys. Its not only in AE. Same thing happens in video editing, graphic design, etc. And those guys whine about it just as much. Only one thing to do about it, and that's accept it.
Shit used to be an art, now not so much anymore. As I said, I get the grievances. Hell I work at the movie theatre, job was way cooler back when i had to handle actual film, now its all digital and sucky programming on a pc.
But it is what it is and we all need to get over it. This 'things used to be better in the old days' is really something that literally has been around for centuries and probably in 20 years we will all say that back in 2014 things were way better.
I remember watching the 'Apocalypse Now' documentary; Heart Of Darkness if I remember correctly. In which Coppola prophecized at one point he hoped to see the day that any random guy could afford a videocamera. Because he imagined that this could bring so much new creativity into the industry that otherwise would remain untapped potential.
Now a few decades later we all have a HD camera in our pocket and yeah, you can look at the crap on youtube and whine about how fucking wrong he was. But I say go onto Vimeo and watch some staff picks. What is happening there is exactly what the guy predicted. And I guess even though in absolute numbers the crap outweighs the good a 1000 to 1, in my opinion it is worth it for the people that are willing to dig a bit deeper to find a gem.
Because even though you Audio engineers apparently increasingly deal with crappy bands/attitudes, there are those occasional great records that still are being made today that would never have left the bedroom if it wasn't for this evolution. Like everything in life, it works both ways i guess.